Unreal Tournament: Game of the Year Edition

Gears Of War Composer On Life Support On October 6, Gears of War composer Kevin Riepl tweeted that he thought someone "roofied" him while out drinking. He'd blacked out. "Somethings effed up," he added. "Like literally. Something knocked me out." Within days, Riepl was on life support.


By the following day, Riepl was in the hospital from where he uploaded this photo. The game composer tweeted that all his tests came back normal, but was having an MRI to check if there were any issues with his heart.


Riepl is best known for his work scoring Unreal Tournament games, the first Gears of War and the upcoming Aliens: Colonial Marines.


On October 10, Riepl's wife Tracy tweeted (via his account) that he was on life support and needed blood transfusions. As of several hours ago, Tracy tweeted that her husband was "still sedated while on life support but was more responsive to family in the room". Riepl has young children.


Gears Of War Composer On Life Support "Lastly, I wanted to say thank you from the bottom of my heart for all your positive vibes, thoughts and prayers," Tracy added.


No word yet on what the cause is. Riepl is scheduled to go into surgery tomorrow night. Here's hoping it is a success.


kevinrieplmusic (kevinrieplmusic) on Twitter [Twitter Thanks, Ralph!] [Pic]


Unreal Tournament: Game of the Year Edition

If I learned anything from Unreal Tournament, it's that two automatic pistols are better than one, and holding them sideways makes them fire faster. It's two popular handgun fallacies in one!


Unreal Tournament and the Unreal series in general have produced some pretty amazing weapons with equally impressive alternate firing modes. Some of my personal favorites include the Flak Cannon, with its joyous bouncing shrapnel, and the ASMD Shock Rifle, with an alt-fire mode that produced a Shock Core, that could be fired upon to create an explosion of energy.


For all of the amazing alt-fire modes the series has produced, the Enforcer automatic pistol's secondary firing mode always seemed a bit off.


Hitting the right mouse button turned the gun sideways, gangsta-style. This is a completely silly way to hold a pistol that has almost no benefit in real life, outside of certain tactical situations. Police holding riot shields, for example, will sometimes hold a firearm sideways because tilting and lifting the gun can make the sight easier to see. It doesn't make the gun fire faster, which is what happens in Unreal Tournament.


Perhaps it's just how future weapons work. There's some sort of gyroscope inside the gun that works better when the weapon is sideways, perhaps? Couldn't the weapon manufacturer tilt things around so it fired faster upright instead? It's certainly not a matter of squeezing the trigger faster, since it is an automatic weapon.


It's even more entertaining when you pick up an additional Enforcer off the corpse of a fallen enemy. Dual wielding handguns is a common occurrence in shooter video games and Hong Kong action movies, but in real life all firing a weapon in both hands generally does is make a lot of noise. Normally you'd be better off firing a single weapon using a two-handed grip, which allows for more shots fired with greater accuracy. Plus, handguns have sights for a reason, and lining up the sights on two guns in two hands with only two eyes is next to impossible.


So you can probably understand why I giggle when I see those two guns turned sideways.


Epic balanced out the increased rate of fire with decreased accuracy, so on average, holding the pistol sideways isn't much better than holding it upright, except in circumstances where your opponent is extremely close. The only reason I'm doing so well in the clip is because I'm battling easy bots instead of wily humans.


So why use the Enforcer's alt-fire mode at all? The same reason John Woo had Chow Yun Fat flying through the air firing two pistols through a cloud of doves every chance he could get. It's just plain cool.


Completely ridiculous, but ridiculously cool.


Unreal Tournament: Game of the Year Edition

The History of Headshots, Gaming's Favorite Act Of Unreal ViolenceIt may seem ghoulish to the outsider. It will seem essential to the gamer. One of the most popular things to do in video games is to aim for the head with a gun and fire. Who thought of that? And why do people like doing it so much?


Why Headshots Make Some People Happy

Let's go with the pleasure part of it first, before we get to the history lesson.


The headshot is one of those grisly gaming thrills. Its popularity fits so well with the fact that the creators of Doom — gaming's greatest first-person shooter and a game without headshots — was made by a company called id. No one's superego aims for the skull.


Separated from the consequence of real-world death and pain, the video game headshot is, to so many millions of players, a joy. It's common in many major shooters for players to be rewarded for shooting to the head. Enemies crumble when impacted by that toughest of shots.


The History of Headshots, Gaming's Favorite Act Of Unreal Violence


Ask a gamer, as we have, why they like headshots and some will talk about the sound and the splat, the feeling of total domination of their video game enemy.


Ask a video game designer why headshots are so satisfying and they may start with a joke: "I guess that's because it's what we'd all like to do in real life," Paul Wedgwood, creative director at Splash Damage and top-flight shooter gamer, said glibly when asked that question a year ago.


Wedgwood was kidding.


The men and women who make headshots possible in their games seem not at all monstrous. Far from it, they are explorers of technology and — as it says on the business card, more or less — designers of games. Their interest is play. Balance. Rules. Strategy. Challenge.


Matt Hooper, designer of an upcoming id game, Rage, explained the satisfaction of scoring a headshot by imagining a common video game sniper scenario: "It can be this little story you're telling," he said, referring to the story-making abilities of the player, not the game creator. "It's this little micro-story: That guy doesn't know I'm there. I zoom in and he's looking around and doesn't know I'm there. And that's great visual feedback… a one shot kill instead of just unloading a clip. Maybe there was a little opportunity for stealth, depending on the game. The fact that you got him at a distance and that it takes some coordination — that whole risk-reward thing — works out really nicely."


The headshot is the uncleared path, the harder road. Its termination is a peak from which the player can brag. In a multiplayer game, you, the headshotee will hear it from the headshotter. I shot you not in the torso nor the arm. I shot you in the head. Your character probably just died (Died for a second; you'll be back and get another chance).


"Headshots are used by the players to humiliate his or her adversaries," Matteo Bittanti, a video game researcher at Stanford University said in an e-mail. "It's both a function (eliminating the enemies) and a spectacle (it's hard to accomplish), a demonstration of skill, and an aesthetic style per se."


Bittanti appreciates the cranial kill. Last year, he created an exhibition of shots of headshots. One image from his "Headshotz" appears atop this story.


People can find these things beautiful.


People can get very into headshots. Perhaps you've seen, or are soon never to forget, this popular and profane 2006 YouTube clip featuring Counter-Strike, one of the early headshot-centric games. FPS Doug, filmed by website Pure Pwnage shows better than anyone how the headshot is the ultimate win, a gamer high:



Here's why Wedgwood actually likes headshots: "What a player realizes subconsciously and intuitively, even if they don't realize it on the surface, is that when you shoot at some[one] in a game, there's actually a big rectangular box around them. Hitting them just about anywhere at all is clearly a hit. But to hit the head is [hard]. All good video games give you double damage for the head, which usually leads to a kill."



"For most of us, especially the old-school shooter players," Wedgwood continued, "that was our entire tactic: In early Quake or early Team Fortress, you would grenade somebody first or rocket them first, so you could take them below 90% damage. You were just going to pepper their head from that point forward. They would always wonder why you didn't carry on. They'd come up and would be launching rocket after rocket after rocket. You'd fire one rocket. You'd roll out a grenade for where they were about to land, and — on their way down — you'd be hitting them in the head with a shotgun, because you knew that if two or three of those bullets hit they'd be dead.


"I think for the hardcore players it's just super-satisfying. It's the demonstration of skill — if you do it twice."


Where Headshots Were Born (And Why They Missed Doom)

Before the late 90s the closest gamers came to performing a headshot was jumping Mario on top of a Goomba's scalp in 1985's Super Mario Brothers or striking an enemy in 1994 PC shooter Heretic and watching the bad guy's head fall off.


Doom, released in 1993 to launch a new era of gamers expressing virtual aggression, didn't have headshots. Co-creator John Romero says he didn't even think of trying to put them in there. "We made this game in one year, from concept to ship," he said during a recent phone interview. "There just wasn't time to continue the game design evolution of what we were doing in the game. We made it into something that was really fun and we shipped it."


The headshot went unexplored for Doom for a pretty good reason: "It didn't occur to me [to have headshots] because we never used crosshairs in our game."


The History of Headshots, Gaming's Favorite Act Of Unreal Violence


In Doom the player couldn't aim up or down. They couldn't shoot for the head any more than they could shoot for the feet. All characters in the game may have looked to be only as tall as a man or a monster, but, in programming terms, they were infinitely high. Whether the enemy stood on the same floor as the player or high on a staircase, if a gamer aimed toward them on the horizontal axis and fired, their shot would find its home in the center mass of their enemy. "We wanted the player to feel like, 'Hey, there's a guy up there and I shoot and — boom! — he's getting hit," Romero remembered.


Romero never tried to design for headshots, so he wound up discovering them the way other gamers in the late 90s did. He played GoldenEye on the Nintendo 64. Game designers and historians agree: that's the game that helped start this headshot thing.


UPDATE: As with so much of history, there's an asterisk that should be added here. After the publication of this story, some readers pointed out that GoldenEye was not their first experience with a video game headshot. They pointed to the original Team Fortress. That 1996 PC game launched without headshots, but as it got updated through patches that added all sorts of new features, headshots made it in.


On April 13 1997, four months before the release of GoldenEye, Team Fortress players got a chance to try the "Version 2.5 Beta A." Here are some of the update notes, emphasis added:


———————————————————
Version 2.5 Beta A - Released 13/4/97
———————————————————
Classes: Scout, Sniper, Soldier, Demolitions Man, Combat Medic,
Heavy Weapons Guy, Spy, Engineer.


Features Added:
- New, improved, and just plain nastier cheat checking.
- Concussed ppl make bubbles.
- Sniper rifle now has locational damage, like TF-Sniper.
- Support for skins for each class for each team. Good for Clan battles.
- A new alias called "special", which does the primary
ability of your class.


That Team Fortress update rightfully gives the PC game the claim to beating GoldenEye out as the first first-person shooter with headshots. That they were specific to the Sniper and not all classes of player characters probably also merits the game an asterisk.


It's hard to say who came up with the headshot concept first, harder than it is to say who released it to the public first. With GoldenEye deep into development by the time of Team Fortress update's release, this is probably another instance of parallel inspiration. The year 1997 was the time for headshots to become an essential part of FPS, one way or another. END UPDATE


The History of Headshots, Gaming's Favorite Act Of Unreal Violence


In 1997 Nintendo published a James Bond first-person shooter made by a team of designers at British development studio Rare. The small 10-person team was led by Martin Hollis, a man whose possible role as the creator of video game's most enduring act of violence isn't betrayed by his pleasant, quiet demeanor nor his most recently released game, a 2009 title about giving vegetables haircuts.


(On second thought, perhaps aiming a gun toward the head of a person and aiming shears toward the leaves of a carrot are not that far from each other.)


But Bonsai Barber is Martin Hollis now. GoldenEye and its headshots were Martin Hollis in the late 90s.


"From our point of view headshots was just one idea of thousands," Hollis recalled in a recent e-mail interview. "Yes, we wanted to do the best possible work, but we never thought we were creating industry standards." They were.


The GoldenEye headshot was invented because of technology. Before that Nintendo 64 game, players of shooters aimed at their enemies and usually either hit them or not, with no distinction made about where the enemy took the bullet. A rare exception got the GoldenEye team, particularly Hollis and programmer Mark Edmonds, thinking. "Our inspiration was Virtua Cop," Hollis said, referring to a Sega-made shooting gallery game controlled with a gun-controller, a la Nintendo classic Duck Hunt. "It did not have headshots, but did respond differently if you shot an enemy's weapon or weapon arm. You would get points, a huge points multiplier and, importantly, a specialized enemy animation."


The GoldenEye guys could use this idea of targeting body parts — a breakthrough in the depiction of human-to-human interaction in video games — in their James Bond adventure.


"We wanted the reactive animation, and taking it as inspiration, we used movie reality and dreamt up tens of different animations for each hit location on the body," Hollis said. "For the gameplay side, we deduct different damage from the enemy depending on hit location. Thus, was invented the headshot. There is some logic to it, because destroying the medulla oblongata will instantly paralyze an opponent, but in the real world the normal advice is to incapacitate with trunk shots, at least initially."


Headshots weren't automatically fatal in GoldenEye. Hollis said they cost an enemy four health points, compared to two for a hit on the body and one for the limb. Tougher enemies could handle losing four health points. They could handle groin shots as well. But it was the headshots gamers — like Hollis' crew — came to love.



"The neat idea that we instantly loved," said Hollis, "was the broader idea: reactive animations per hit location, with damage. You shoot a guy in the hand, and he reacts grasping that hand. Or you shoot him in the crotch and he clutches and writhes. In contrast, headshots grew on us over time, because they were deeply satisfying."


The team liked the challenge and that feeling of supreme success that headshots provided, that risk-reward that designers like Wedgwood and Hooper would later articulate. "In GoldenEye, the auto-aim moves to the center of mass of the character," Hollis said. "If you score a headshot, that means you are likely using manual aim, which is harder. Secondly, the head is a smaller and more mobile target than the body." The headshot was skill.


The headshot wasn't, however, the kind of thing you might expect to see in, say, a GoldenEye movie. On the big screen James Bond had a license to kill, but seldom exercised it so viciously. "The headshot isn't very Bondian because it is needlessly brutal," Hollis said. "You imagine it is a very messy and hideous way to kill someone. We went through one bloody iteration, but switched our final damage special effects to be carefully understated, meaning no explosions of blood or gore, making the headshot fairly clinical and underplaying the shock value." Players who scores a lot of headshots in multiplayer received the accolade of being "Most professional."


If GoldenEye was one of the first games to have headshots it may have also been the last to minimize the visuals of their violence. In the years that followed, headshots would become not just more common, but more brutal.


The Evolution Of A Bloody Mess

Where GoldenEye held back, 2000's Soldier of Fortune splattered virtual blood. The first-person shooter from Raven Software also allowed players to target different body parts of an enemy, including the head. The results of shots fired to those parts was graphic. Ultra-violence became a literal bullet point used to sell the series.


Your video game headshots were victories. The 1999 Unreal Tournament had featured an announcer who proclaimed "Headshot!" as each was scored. That was the invention of designers Cliff Bleszinski and Brandon Reinhart, according to Bleszinski. The "headshot" announcement was a gamer favorite.



If any of this seemed too celebratory for such a macabre act, games couldn't get the blame for starting it. At least in games, headshots had a strategic purpose. They were a skillful means to an efficient end. The same couldn't be said about any cinematic antecedents.


Historian Bittanti believes gaming headshots drew inspiration from film, specifically from this scene in George Romero's 1978 zombie movie Dawn of the Dead:



That clip, pulled by a website called Great Movie Deaths (They also have the headshot from Saving Private Ryan) doesn't look that dissimilar from a headshot clip pulled from a Soldier of Fortune video game sequel:



Bittanti believes the prevalence of headshots in games is now influencing movies. What video games have taken, they are passing back around. He cited the Call of Duty-style scene from this summer's Inception, as well as the sniper-centric movie-within-a-movie in last year's Inglorious Basterds.


Games still probably have more headshots than movies, even if movies are beginning to catch up.


The 2007 Fallout 3 gave players a slow-motion look at the nastiest of headshots. This wasn't a twitch game, though. Headshots were the result of mathematical targeting. In most firefights, a player would pause the game, pick a body part at which to shoot, decide whether the percentage likelihood of firing was worth the payoff, pre-load as many shots as they could and then un-pause and see what happened. What happened was, if successful, a bloody mess.


Of course, someone on YouTube made a montage of Fallout 3's most brutal shots to the head:



Most games with headshots — most shooter games — came from the West. But it was a Japanese game that took advantage of gamer's lust for headshots and tricked them. As the Resident Evil horror series progressed from PlayStation to GameCube, it began to allow players to target the heads of zombies. Against the worst of the shambling hordes, a shotgun to the head could be a stopper. But in 2005's Resident Evil 4, gamers who were used to targeting the cranium in any shooter they played got a surprise. Headshots caused some enemies to mutate into tougher foes.


ARE HEADSHOTS RUINING GAMES?
Headshots were positively thrilling when they first hit the shooter scene in games like GoldenEye 007 and Soldier of Fortune. They're like a fun little metagame, where if you get good enough you can bypass the act of fighting an enemy with a single bullet.

But these days, I'm not so sure.


What happens when you get so good that you're racking up those one-hit kills? You start bypassing the majority of the game. Most of a shooter's weapons—the ones that don't let you shoot foes in the face—quickly become useless. I've played through entire games relying primarily on accurate pistols instead of splashy rocket launchers or unreliable shotguns. It's not much fun, and I'd certainly prefer a balanced, well-considered arsenal, but hey, war is hell, man.
—Jeff Gerstmann, GiantBomb.com


The Headshot Legacy, With Grumbling

The popularity of headshots doesn't seem to be diminishing, though there is a new argument about how they might be distorting the way we play our games (see sidebar).


If you're wondering if all this violence raises any other questions in terms of influence it doesn't seem to. On occasion of shootings in the real world in which games are given some degree of blame, shooting toward the head sometimes gets passing mention, but there's no evidence that the headshots gamers commit in games make them more interested, nor more capable of shooting toward the head of people in real life.


Headshots are more of a game thing, the way killing a king with a horse is more of a chess thing. It is a means of play that has a logic to it and it is an expected element for new shooter games, as far as gamers and game creators are concerned. Headshots are featured in next year's Bulletstorm and probably most other upcoming shooters.


"The headshot in video games is a triumph of film physics over actual military reality," says Hollis that likely co-inventor of this video game staple. In the context of a video game, he said, "It feels so right ... There is something deeply satisfying about taking that shot successfully. It is about killing, but doing it instantly and completely, without your opponent even having time to realize they are dead. That's an absolute triumph and a cerebral ego boost because you have reduced them to the standing of a squashed bug."


Watch the clips in this article in one sitting and the video game headshot may seem odd, some ghoulish fixation that a little more sunlight in a gamer's life might remedy. But the headshot's history was one of technological advancement. It came to be because of progress. To use an intentionally distinct metaphor, the invention of the video game headshot was as if only hugging was possible until one day a man invented kissing, that more precise and potent way of interacting.


Headshots are another step, believe it or not, toward interaction with nuance. They are, of course, a release, a mark of skill and, yes, a celebration for some people of a dominating, victimizing act. They invigorate the gamer and remain today as equally captivating and macabre as any act of virtual violence ever designed during the continued evolution of video game creation.


Headshots are one of gaming's most misunderstood elements. Hopefully they now make a little more sense.


The History of Headshots, Gaming's Favorite Act Of Unreal Violence


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